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7 campsites in France, Picardy for Oise

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Camping Le Pre des Moines
Camping Le Pré des Moines is located in Gouvieux, France, nestled in a wooded area of 6 hectares. It is perfect for those who want to experience a peaceful and natural setting. It is a great base for exploring the Oise region, with its many historical monuments, charming villages, and beautiful scenery. The campsite offers a variety of accommodation options, including 32 touring pitches with 10Amp electric hook-up points available. Pitches are spacious and surrounded by trees, providing plenty of privacy.
Camping de la Trye
Camping de la Trye is located on the edge of the pretty village of Bresles, to the east of Beauvais, and one hour’s drive north of Paris. This is an attractive site, with good access to the motorway network. There are 110 grassy pitches, all with electrical connections. The site is well located for exploring the gentle countryside of the Oise – possibly on horseback (there are riding stables on site). Accompanied nature hikes are also organised, and are a popular way to discover the local flora and fauna. Cycling is popular in the region – cycle hire is available, and the site lies on the Paris – London cycle trail.
Camping Campix
This informal site has been unusually developed in a former sandstone quarry on the outskirts of the small town. The quarry walls provide a sheltered, peaceful environment and trees soften the slopes. Not a neat, manicured site, the 160 pitches are in small groups on different levels with stone and gravel access roads (some fairly steep). Electricity (6A) is available to all the pitches. There are many secluded corners, mostly for smaller units and tents, and space for children to explore (parents must supervise – some areas, although fenced, could be dangerous). There are roulottes and wooden chalets to rent.
Camping de l’Abbatiale
In the heart of the Oise valley, close to Chantilly and within striking distance of Paris, Camping de l’Abbatiale consists of a small traditional campsite of 30 pitches, a section with 25 mobile homes to rent and a large area of 245 pitches devoted to residential and seasonal units. Ten pitches have hardstanding, the rest are on level grass including a pleasant little group, separated by hedges, round a central grassy area with a covered picnic table. Electricity (6A) and water connections are available, and five have their own electric connection, tap and drain. Mature trees offer some shade in places.
Camping Les Berges de l'Iton
Camping Les Berges de l'Iton is in the Upper Normandy region, south of the Eure, at the gateway to the Perche and Lower Normandy. It is situated on the banks of the River Iton, in the heart of the Normandy countryside. The site has 31 grass/hardstanding pitches, 26 of which are for touring units and have a 6/13-amp hook-up point, 26 are seasonal, and 4 mobile homes are available to hire.
Camping le Coeur de la Forêt
The town of Pierrefonds is dominated by an impressive château that will be instantly recognised by followers of the TV series Merlin. The campsite is on the edge of the town and aims to attract traditional campers as well as holiday-makers looking for something different in the way of accommodation. You are sure of a warm welcome from the very friendly manager. There are currently 59 pitches, including 5 occupied by seasonal or rental units. All have 10A electrical connections, water and drain. They are separated by well-trimmed hedges and are mainly level and of a good size, though a few are smaller and sloping.
Aestiva Camping de Sorel
Aestiva Camping de Sorel is located north of Compiègne, close to the A1 motorway and is ideal as an overnight stop. The site has 120 large grassy pitches, of which 70 are available for touring, all with electrical connections (three with water and wastewater).

Picardy

The birthplace of Gothic architecture in France with no less than six cathedrals, Picardy is still predominately rural with deep river valleys, forests of mature beech and oak, peaceful lakes and sandy beaches providing plenty of contrast.

St Quentin

France itself was born in this northern province located between the Marne and the Somme rivers, for it was here that the Franks – ancestors of the French – first settled. Picardy tends to be a region that most people travel through, and this was the invaders' route. Evidence is visible in the 17th-century defensive citadels designed by Vauban at the end of a long period of conquests by English kings and Burgundian dukes.

From a more recent age, acres of immaculately tended war graves are a sobering reminder of two Great Wars. At Vimy Ridge near Arras, World War One trenches have been preserved, a poignant sight. Elsewhere, almost every village between Arras and Amiens has its memorial.  

Picardy’s unspoilt coastline, with its wild beauty and changing light, has inspired generations of artists, Degas and Seurat among them. Today’s visitors can enjoy a wide range of activities – cycling, windsurfing, kayaking, sand-yachting, horse riding and hot-air ballooning. The region also has some of the best golf courses in France. Do not miss the spectacular ‘Baie de Somme’ with its dunes and saltwater meadows, and the magnificent Gothic cathedral at Amiens.

A combination of flat and gently rolling terrain and possessing a quintessentially French atmosphere, Picardy is said to be the crossroads of France due to its proximity to Belgium in the east and Paris in the southwest. A picturesque region, it has a feeling of immense space and boasts some of the most beautiful cathedrals in the world.

The best-known part of Picardy is the Somme, an area synonymous with one of the most devastating battles of the First World War. Many trenches and cemeteries remain as both a reminder and a warning of the desolation that conflict brings. Also in the Somme is Amiens, a lively city that lays claim to the largest, and arguably the most impressive, Gothic cathedral in France, as well as Le Crotoy with its fine, sandy beach – the only south-facing one in northern France. St Quentin in Aisne features some wonderful art deco buildings, as well as a beautifully maintained garden and park named ‘Champs Elysées’.

History enthusiasts will love Picardy, exploring the Great War sites and admiring the architecture in between walking or cycling through lush green countryside.

PLACES OF INTEREST

Places of interest

Château of Chantilly

Abbeville: Church of St Vulfran; Bagatelle Château; Baie de Somme nature reserve.

Amiens: Notre Dame cathedral, impressive for its size and richly sculpted façade and the stone carvings of the choir; monument to the 1918 Battle of the Somme; remarkable ‘hortillonnages’ (water gardens) and interlocking canals.

Aisne: surrounded by 60 fortified churches.

Chantilly: Château of Chantilly with a 17thcentury stable with a ‘live’ Horse Museum.

Compiègne: Seven miles east of the town is Clairière de l’Armistice. The railway coach here is a replica of the one in which the 1918 Armistice was signed and in which Hitler received the French surrender in 1942.

Laon: 12th-century cathedral; WW1 trenches; Vauclair Abbey.

Marquenterre: one of Europe’s most important bird sanctuaries.

CUISINE OF THE REGION

Cuisine of the region

Fresh fish and seafood is popular, as is chicory flavoured coffee.

Carbonnade de Boeuf à la Flamande: Braised beef with beer, onions and bacon.

Caudière (Chaudière, Caudrée): Versions of fish and potato soup.

Ficelles Picardes: Ham pancakes with mushroom sauce.

Flamiche aux poireaux: Puff pastry tart with cream and leeks.

Soupe courquignoise: soup with white wine, fish, moules, leeks and Gruyère cheese